Hepatitis C India — DAA Cure 95%+, Sofosbuvir GT3/GT1, SVR12, Free NVHCP Treatment & Transmission

Last Updated: March 2026 | Reading Time: 9 minutes | ~2,000 words

Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) infection is — uniquely among major chronic viral infections — now curable in >95% of patients with a short course of Direct-Acting Antivirals (DAAs). India has approximately 6–12 million people with chronic HCV infection (anti-HCV prevalence approximately 0.5–1%), with Punjab, Haryana, and parts of UP having significantly higher prevalence (1–4%) due to historical unsafe injecting practices, quack medical injections, and blood transfusions before donor HCV screening was universal (pre-1993). The WHO’s 2030 Hepatitis Elimination goal targets 90% diagnosis and 80% treatment of HCV globally — India’s NVHCP (National Viral Hepatitis Control Programme) has distributed free generic DAAs (sofosbuvir-based) to approximately 10+ lakh patients since 2018, making India one of the world’s largest free HCV treatment programmes. Yet India’s diagnosis rate remains low — approximately only 10–15% of HCV-infected Indians know their status — because HCV infection is typically completely asymptomatic for 20–30 years while silently causing cirrhosis and eventually hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The transformative potential of India’s generic pharmaceutical industry — which produces sofosbuvir-based DAA combinations at approximately ₹5,000–15,000 for a 12-week course (vs ₹70 lakh for the original branded Sovaldi + Harvoni in the USA) — is one of the most important success stories in global health equity.

Hepatitis C India — DAA Sofosbuvir Ledipasvir Cure 95% SVR12 Free Treatment NVHCP
Hepatitis C India — DAA Sofosbuvir Cure 95%+, Free Treatment & SVR12 Guide | StudyHub Health | studyhub.net.in

Hepatitis C — Genotypes, DAA Regimens and Treatment Outcomes

HCV Genotype / PopulationIndia PrevalencePreferred DAA RegimenSVR12 RateIndia Cost & Access
Genotype 3 (GT3) — most common IndiaGT3: 50–75% of all Indian HCV infections (North India especially — Punjab, Haryana 60–70% GT3); particularly common in injection drug users (IDU) in Punjab/NE India; GT3 historically the “difficult” genotype — poorer response to older interferon-based therapy; GT3 NOW curable with modern DAAsSofosbuvir (SOF) 400mg + Daclatasvir (DCV) 60mg once daily × 12 weeks (24 weeks if cirrhosis + treatment-experienced); EASL/WHO preferred GT3 non-cirrhotic: SOF+DCV 12 weeks (SVR 90–95%); GT3 cirrhotic: SOF+DCV 24 weeks OR SOF+DCV+Ribavirin 12 weeks (add Ribavirin 1000–1200mg/day if weight-based); Sofosbuvir + Velpatasvir (SOF/VEL — Epclusa: pangenotypic): single tablet × 12 weeks — excellent GT3 even-cirrhotic (SVR 95%+); preferred where availableGT3 non-cirrhotic SOF+DCV: SVR12 90–95%; GT3 cirrhotic SOF+DCV 24wk: SVR12 85–90%; GT3 SOF/VEL 12wk: SVR 95%+; GT3 most improved by modern DAAs vs historical interferon era (SVR was only 50–60% with PEG-IFN+RBV for GT3 cirrhotic)Generic SOF 400mg: ₹80–100/tablet India (Natco Pharma, Cipla, Mylan — Indian generics under voluntary licence from Gilead); Generic DCV 60mg: ₹80–100/tablet; 12-week SOF+DCV course: approximately ₹10,000–15,000 total; NVHCP: provides free SOF+DCV for BPL card holders and enrolled patients at government hospitals; Punjab government: free HCV treatment programme (largest state-level programme — Punjab >1 lakh patients treated by 2024)
Genotype 1 (GT1) — second most commonGT1: 20–30% of Indian HCV cases; GT1a and GT1b subtypes; higher prevalence in South India and among non-IDU populations; GT1 was the most common genotype worldwide (Europe, USA) — most trial data from GT1Sofosbuvir/Ledipasvir (SOF/LDV — Harvoni equivalent): single tablet 90/400mg once daily × 8 weeks (non-cirrhotic, treatment-naive, HCV RNA <6 million IU/mL) or 12 weeks (all others); GT1 non-cirrhotic: SOF/LDV 12 weeks (SVR 97–99%); OR Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir (G/P — Maviret): 8 weeks non-cirrhotic GT1 (pangenotypic) — SVR 97–99%; Sofosbuvir/Velpatasvir (SOF/VEL): 12 weeks (pangenotypic — GT1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6)GT1 SOF/LDV 12wk: SVR 97–99%; GT1 cirrhotic SOF/LDV ± Ribavirin 12–24wk: SVR 95–97%; GT1 G/P 8wk non-cirrhotic: SVR 99%; essentially ALL GT1 is curable with modern DAAsGeneric SOF/LDV (Ledipasvir 90mg + SOF 400mg) India: ₹200–300/tablet; 12-week course ≈ ₹15,000–25,000; Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir (AbbVie Maviret) — generic India entry 2024–2025 via voluntary licensing; NVHCP free access for GT1 patients; SOF/LDV preferred GT1 in India due to generic availability and established safety profile
Pangenotypic Regimens (GT1–6)Applicable all genotypes; particularly useful in India where GT testing may be unavailable at district levelSofosbuvir/Velpatasvir (SOF/VEL — generic Epclusa): 400/100mg once daily × 12 weeks (non-cirrhotic ALL genotypes); 12 weeks + Ribavirin (GT3 cirrhotic) or 24 weeks without RBV; Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir (G/P): 8 weeks (non-cirrhotic, treatment-naive, all GT); 12 weeks (cirrhotic or treatment-experienced); pangenotypic = treat without genotyping (simplifies India district-level treatment where genotyping labs unavailable)SOF/VEL ALL GT non-cirrhotic: SVR 98–99%; G/P 8wk non-cirrhotic: SVR 98–100%; paradigm-shifting for resource-limited India: treat-without-genotype approach using pangenotypic DAA → frees up treatment from genotyping prerequisiteGeneric SOF/VEL India: ₹200–400/tablet; 12-week course ₹15,000–30,000; increasingly preferred by India’s NVHCP for pangenotypic simplicity; Natco, Cipla, Mylan produce SOF/VEL India; G/P generic India: entering market 2024–2025; price to fall to ₹10,000–20,000 for 8-week course
Special Populations — Cirrhosis, HIV, CKD, Post-TransplantHCV + cirrhosis (decompensated — Child-Pugh B/C): highest mortality risk; urgently need treatment but some regimens contraindicated; HCV + HIV: coinfection — requires drug-drug interaction check with ART; HCV + CKD (<30 mL/min): SOF renal metabolite accumulation — dose adjustment or SOF-free regimens; HCV post-liver transplant: aggressive recurrence; high-priority treatmentDecompensated cirrhosis (Child-Pugh B/C): SOF/VEL ± Ribavirin 24 weeks OR SOF+DCV ± RBV 24 weeks; CONTRAINDICATED: NS3/4A protease inhibitor-containing regimens (simeprevir, paritaprevir, glecaprevir — contraindicated in decompensated — hepatotoxicity); HCV + HIV: SOF-based DAAs generally safe with most ART; check interactions (rifampicin/efavirenz — not with SOF; TDF + SOF — monitor creatinine); HCV + CKD <30: Glecaprevir/Pibrentasvir 8–12 weeks (renal-safe — no SOF; no dose adjustment); SOF-based: use with caution/avoid if eGFR <30; Post-transplant HCV: SOF/LDV or SOF/VEL — calcineurin inhibitor levels need monitoring (cyclosporin + SOF/LDV: increase cyclosporin levels)HCV + HIV co-infection: SVR equivalent to HCV monoinfection with same DAA regimens; HCV cirrhosis decompensated: SVR 75–85% (lower than compensated) but significant clinical stabilisation even with SVR; CKD G/P: SVR 98%+ in HCV + CKD; post-transplant DAA: SVR 95%+ prevents graft-related HCV recurrence cirrhosisAIIMS, PGI Chandigarh, SGPGI Lucknow, Tata Memorial Mumbai — expertise in complex HCV (cirrhotic/HIV/renal); free DAAs for HIV-HCV coinfection at ART centres under NACO; NVHCP reimburses DAA for special populations; HCV + HIV = priority treatment under NACO; HIV-viral load and CD4 monitoring concurrent with HCV treatment in HIV coinfected
Post-SVR Monitoring & HCC SurveillanceSVR12 (sustained virologic response at 12 weeks after treatment completion = HCV RNA undetectable) = functional cure of HCV; HCV RNA will remain negative lifelong in >99% of patients; SVR12 rate across all modern DAA regimens in India: approximately 95–99% in treatment-naive non-cirrhotic; HCC risk: SVR12 dramatically reduces HCC risk but does NOT eliminate it in patients with pre-existing cirrhosisPost-SVR monitoring: HCV RNA at 12 weeks post-treatment (SVR12 confirmation); if SVR12 confirmed: HCV is cured; NO further HCV treatment needed; Cirrhosis patients post-SVR: CONTINUE HCC surveillance indefinitely (USS + AFP every 6 months — cirrhosis-related HCC risk persists even after HCV cure; fibro regression occurs but structural cirrhosis persists); FibroScan 1 year post-SVR (may show fibrosis regression — motivating); Reinfection: possible if risk behaviour continues (IDU — ongoing needle sharing); re-treat with same DAA class if reinfected; Varices: endoscopic surveillance for oesophageal varices if cirrhosis; beta-blocker prophylaxis (propranolol/carvedilol) if large varicesSVR = cure; no residual virus; no further treatment; HCC risk at 5 years post-SVR (cirrhotic): 1–3%/year vs 5–8%/year without treatment; liver stiffness regression by FibroScan: median 30–50% improvement at 2 years post-SVR in advanced fibrosis; some patients defibroticise from F3/F4 → F1/F2 at 3–5 years post-SVR (liver regeneration capacity)Post-SVR: minimum 2 FibroScan tests (baseline + 1 year post-SVR) at government hepatology; USS + AFP every 6 months free at NVHCP-affiliated centres; strong encouragement to stay in follow-up: many India SVR patients lost to post-treatment follow-up — this must improve; HCC surveillance compliance India district level: needs intervention

Frequently Asked Questions

How does HCV cure with DAAs work — and what is SVR12?

The development of direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) for HCV represents one of the most remarkable pharmacological achievements of the 21st century — transforming a disease that once required 48 weeks of miserable interferon-based treatment with 40–60% success into a 8–12 week cure with >95% success and minimal side effects: How DAAs work — the three target sites: NS5B polymerase inhibitors (sofosbuvir — SOF): HCV is an RNA virus that replicates using its own RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (NS5B); sofosbuvir is a nucleotide analogue prodrug — it is incorporated into HCV RNA chain by NS5B → causes premature chain termination → viral RNA synthesis stops; sofosbuvir is the backbone of virtually all modern HCV treatment and is exquisitely specific to HCV (minimal human polymerase off-target effects); NS5A inhibitors (daclatasvir, ledipasvir, velpatasvir, pibrentasvir): NS5A is an HCV non-structural protein essential for viral replication and assembly; NS5A inhibitors block HCV genome replication and virion assembly; pan-genotypic NS5A inhibitors (velpatasvir, pibrentasvir) cover GT1–6 with high barrier to resistance; NS3/4A protease inhibitors (simeprevir, paritaprevir, glecaprevir): HCV protease (NS3/4A) processes the viral polyprotein into functional proteins; protease inhibitors block this processing → interrupted viral lifecycle; limitation: NS3/4A inhibitors contraindicated in decompensated cirrhosis (hepatotoxicity); combination DAA therapy: combining NS5B + NS5A ± NS3 inhibitors → attacks HCV at multiple simultaneous points → prevents resistance emergence → very high SVR rates. What is SVR12 and what does it mean: SVR (sustained virologic response) = HCV RNA undetectable by PCR at 12 weeks after completing treatment; SVR12 = “achieved SVR at week 12 post-treatment” = CURE; once SVR12 is confirmed: HCV RNA will remain undetectable in >99% of patients lifelong — rare relapses beyond 12 weeks occur in <1%; SVR12 ≠ HCV antibody negativity: anti-HCV antibodies remain positive for life after cure (lifelong immunological memory) — this confuses many patients; a patient with prior HCV infection + SVR12 will have: anti-HCV positive (lifelong); HCV RNA undetectable (cured); this is NOT re-infection if they were recently treated — must test HCV RNA, not anti-HCV, to confirm cure or detect reinfection; SVR12 clinical benefits: marked reduction in cirrhosis progression; 70–75% reduction in HCC incidence even in cirrhotic patients; reduction in liver-related mortality by 50–60%; improvement in extra-hepatic manifestations (HCV cryoglobulinaemia, HCV-associated glomerulonephritis, HCV-associated lymphoma — all improve with SVR). The India SVR12 testing gap: Many Indian patients complete DAA treatment but never return for SVR12 HCV RNA test; without SVR12 confirmation: cannot confirm cure; does not detect the <5% who did not achieve SVR (treatment failure needing re-treatment); NVHCP data: approximately 30–40% of treated patients in India do not return for SVR12 testing; this gap is a major priority; ASHAs and district nurses should remind patients: “Come back ONCE more, 12 weeks after your last tablet, for the blood test that confirms your cure.”

READ ALSO  How Much Melatonin Should You Take?

How is HCV transmitted in India — and who should be tested?

Unlike HBV (which India transmits predominantly perinatally and sexually), HCV in India is transmitted overwhelmingly through unsafe injections and blood exposure — making India’s HCV epidemic in many ways an iatrogenic (medically-caused) epidemic that could be prevented entirely: Major HCV transmission routes in India: Unsafe injections by quacks and unqualified practitioners (RMPs — rural medical practitioners): India has an estimated 2.5 million unqualified practitioners; many reuse glass syringes or improperly sterilise plastic syringes between patients; this has been the primary driver of HCV in rural Punjab, Haryana, and UP; “injection culture” — Indian patients often expect and demand injections (even for viral fevers where IV antibiotics are useless) → quack injects multiple patients with the same syringe; Blood transfusion (pre-1993): mandatory HCV donor testing was introduced in India only in the late 1990s–2004 in most states; patients transfused before this era (surgical patients, accident victims, thalassemia patients — frequent transfusions → high HCV risk) have high HCV prevalence; thalassemia patients in India: 30–60% HCV seropositive in older studies (pre-NAT screening era); Haemodialysis patients: historically high HCV transmission in Indian dialysis units due to poor infection control; current HVPCP guidelines: strict HCV isolation protocols for dialysis; Injecting drug users (IDU): Punjab, NE India (Manipur, Nagaland, Mizoram — highest IDU rates India); sharing needles/syringes in IDU communities → explosive HCV spread; NACO needle exchange programme (NSP): free sterile needles for IDU to reduce blood-borne virus transmission; Tattooing, body piercing with unsterile equipment: significant route particularly in tribal communities and young urban populations; healthcare worker occupational exposure: needle-stick injury → HCV transmission risk 0–7%; lower than HBV; post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP): no effective PEP for HCV (monitor for 6 months with HCV RNA PCR); Sexual transmission: low efficiency for HCV (unlike HBV/HIV) in heterosexual monogamous — higher in HIV-positive MSM (men who have sex with men) with co-infection. Who should be tested for HCV in India — recommended testing groups: All adults who received blood transfusions before 2004; anyone who has ever used injecting drugs (even once — “one-time experimentation” — high IDU-peer HCV transmission); patients on haemodialysis or with CKD (chronic kidney disease); healthcare workers (annual HCV testing recommended); HIV-positive individuals (all → HCV coinfection screening); patients with unexplained elevated ALT/AST; cirrhosis or liver disease of unknown cause; thalassemia major and sickle cell patients (frequent transfusions — pre-NAT testing era); sexual partners of HCV-positive persons (low risk but consider); ASHA/ANM community identification of: former injection quack patients in high-prevalence villages (Punjab, Haryana screening camps effective); General population testing: NVHCP provides free anti-HCV testing at government hospitals — no high-risk behaviour required to qualify for testing; simply ask for “Hepatitis C blood test” at any government hospital or ayushman bharat health centre.

READ ALSO  High BP Symptoms — 11 Warning Signs of Hypertension Explained

What to Read Next


A 58-year-old woman from a village in Punjab had a blood transfusion in 1991 after a caesarean section. She was never tested. In 2023 — 32 years later — she develops ascites (abdominal fluid). Liver USS: cirrhosis. Anti-HCV: positive. HCV RNA: 1.8 million IU/mL. Genotype 3. She starts SOF + DCV (free, from the district civil hospital hepatology ward). At 12 weeks post-treatment: HCV RNA undetectable. SVR12 confirmed. She cried at the clinic. Her HCV is cured. But her cirrhosis is Real and permanent — it will not fully reverse. HCC surveillance USS will continue every 6 months for the rest of her life. She could have been cured 30 years earlier if she had been tested. The blood is on no one’s hands — but the future belongs to the 12 million still untested in India who can still be found in time.

About This Guide: Written by the StudyHub Health Editorial Team (studyhub.net.in) based on EASL HCV Clinical Practice Guidelines 2022 (updated 2024), WHO HCV Testing & Treatment Guidance 2024, India NVHCP operational report 2023, and Lancet Infectious Diseases HCV India burden data 2023. Last updated: March 2026.

READ ALSO  Probiotics: Benefits & Side Effects

Hepatitis C is Curable — Free Treatment Available: If you have ever had a blood transfusion (especially before 2004), used injections from unqualified practitioners, or used injecting drugs — get a free anti-HCV test at any government hospital. If positive: free HCV RNA testing and free DAA treatment (sofosbuvir-based, 12 weeks, ₹0 under NVHCP) will cure you in >95% of cases. Come back for your SVR12 test 12 weeks after finishing.

💊 Ask for Generic Sofosbuvir if Cost Is a Barrier: Even if you are not eligible for free NVHCP treatment, generic sofosbuvir (Natco/Cipla/Mylan — same molecule as Sovaldi) costs ₹80–100/tablet in India. A full 12-week course of SOF+DCV = approximately ₹10,000–15,000. Compare this to ₹70 lakh for the branded original in the USA. India’s generic pharmaceutical industry has democratised HCV cure. Demand the generic.

⚕️ Medical Disclaimer: This article provides general educational information about Hepatitis C. All treatment decisions — HCV genotyping, DAA selection, special population management (cirrhosis, HIV, CKD), and post-SVR surveillance — require qualified hepatologist or gastroenterologist assessment. Do not self-prescribe DAA without medical supervision.

Scroll to Top